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Topic: Bored Ape Yacht Club (BAYC) would Have Saved Users over $80 Million in Gas Fees (Read 48 times)

copper member
Activity: 2856
Merit: 3071
https://bit.ly/387FXHi lightning theory
It seems odd they wouldn't notice they could've cut fees by 70%, surely that'd be something you'd notice if you were competent or just did a small amount of testing. I've seen a lot of smart contract fees greatly reduce recently and I think it's optimisations like these that were missed first time but have since been resolved (either that or I just found a very optimal time to do my last interaction).
legendary
Activity: 3010
Merit: 1028
Leading Crypto Sports Betting & Casino Platform
YUGA just care to sell everything for the money. They will not care about their users. This can be seen from so many minting case that happened with yuga. I dind't like this but it seems any product created by yuga was just over hyped like this land sale minting. I think that it would better if it moves it to the scalable blockchain. The price of land was decreasing so hard.
Some people can pay less for the land and ape token dumped so hard too. it seems that land sale was the main thing that triggering the pump
newbie
Activity: 1
Merit: 0

The “Otherside NFT” land sale by the popular Bored Ape Yacht Club (BAYC) creators began on May 1, 2022.

During the highly anticipated land sale, each plot was available for purchase at 305 APE, an ERC-20 token whose price temporarily soared ahead of the auction.

Although the sale dumped the usual Dutch Auction, it had some caveats that questioned Yuga Labs’ preparedness considering retail NFT collectors’ sensitivity to Gas fees.
https://imgur.com/a/BV9jU5c

Ethereum Temporarily Knocked Off

The rush to acquire land and be part of Yuga Lab’s success was understandable. Over the past few years, BAYC NFTs have earned the creator millions of dollars in revenue—and the number keeps growing as collectors jostle for these rare and uniquely illustrated apes.

It has emerged that Yuga Labs failed to optimize its smart contracts for Gas fees causing NFT purchasers to spend over $80 million extra in fees. The congestion caused by the race to purchase land temporarily “switched off” the lights in Ethereum, even causing Etherscan to halt temporarily. This outage subsequently caused disruptions in other crypto markets.

“We’re sorry for turning off the lights on Ethereum for a while. It seems abundantly clear that ApeCoin will need to migrate to its chain to scale properly. We want to encourage the DAO to start thinking in this direction.”
How Yuga Labs would Have Saved Users over $80 Million in Gas Fees

Ethereum might be one of the most decentralized networks but has a scaling problem. On-chain demand often leads to congestion, leading to Gas spikes despite desperate attempts to incorporate fee-curbing techniques. The activation of EIP-1559, as evidenced by the congestion, was of little help on May 1 when fees soared to $196 to send a simple transaction.

The “Otherside NFT” land sale saw collectors spend over $200 million in Gas within the first hour of launch–but it could have been lower. Analysts have pointed out that this was because Yuga Labs didn’t optimize their contracts to reduce Gas fees.

https://imgur.com/a/F5dt0SS

According to experts, the minter could have, for example, removed the ERC721Enumerable extension, saving land buyers around 70 percent in Gas costs.

https://blockmagnates.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/05/ERC721Enumerable-extension-1024x351.jpeg

Moreover, Yuga Labs could have used the Use ERC721A, making the minting of different NFTs of the same wallet as cheap as minting one NFT.
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